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Posting Your First Job

The recruiting process in TriNet Hire begins with your job post. This will be the main advertisement that your company uses to fill an open position.

Here’s how to get started:

There are two ways to post your first job.

On the Dashboard, select the Create A Job Post button

In the “Jobs” section, select the Post A Job button

Either method one will bring you to the same form to create your job post. This form lets you do three things:

Create your job ad and set up the hiring criteria around the job.

Choose where you want to post your job - either internally, externally, on the free job boards or on all three.

Add skill assessment questions or custom questions to get candidate qualifications as part of their application in addition to a resume

Here is a brief description of each field when creating a job:

JOB TITLE:

This is the title of the job post and the name of the position you’re trying to fill. Consider using an established and recognizable job title like “Administrative Assistant” or “Senior PHP Developer” rather than titles like “Data Alchemist”, “Coding Czar” or “Marketing Wizard”.

STATUS:

We know that your job requirements can change quickly so you have multiple options for defining what’s going on with a specific position right now. There are four options you can choose from:

1: Pending2: Open3: Closed4: Filled

If your job is in anything except the “Open” status, it will NOT get published to your job boards and the Preview function will be disabled.

Also see Admin > Team > Permissions for allowing employees to open up jobs.

NUMBER OF OPENINGS:

The Number Of Openings field lets you choose a number of candidates that can be set to a “Hired” status before the job is closed. Example is you plan on hiring 3 customer support managers. The job will stay open until you have Hired all the candidates associated with the job.

EMPLOYMENT TYPE:

This is your standard job type. You’ve got four options here:

1: Full-Time2: Part-Time3: Contractor (or Freelance)4: Intern

JOB DESCRIPTION:

This is where you list the job description your hiring for. The posting editor is WYSIWYG based, which means you can add bold or italics to your text or add bullet points and indents.

Note: Be careful if you’re cutting and pasting directly from Microsoft Word as it may alter your formatting in ways you didn’t intend. We suggest pasting to a plain text editor and then copying and pasting it into Hire from there for best results.

CATEGORY:

TriNet Hire lets you create categories around your jobs. For example, if you we're hiring a range of Administrative Assistants and wanted to keep your “Junior Assistant”, “Senior Assistant” and “Executive Assistant” in one easy group, you could just create a category called “Assistants” and put all the related job ads there.

This drop down lets you either associate your current job post to an existing Category you’ve already set up or you can create a new one.

LOCATION:

Like with Categories, you can associate locations to your job ad for easier reference. You can choose an existing location or create a new one. The location will appear on your internal/external job pages.

DESIRED EXPERIENCE LEVEL:

Are you looking for someone who’s Entry Level or an Executive? This is the place where you tell your team what you’re looking for.

DESIRED YEARS OF EXPERIENCE:

Sometimes, the Experience Level isn’t enough and a year or two can make the difference between a good and a great candidate. This is where you tell your team how many years of experience are expected when searching for candidates.

DESIRED MINIMUM EDUCATION LEVEL:

Do you have an intellectually or academically demanding position? From Vocational to Ph.D and beyond, you can tell your team how much schooling your ideal candidate will have here.

PERCENTAGE OF TRAVEL:

Here you can specify how much travel your candidate will be doing. We provide increments of 5% all the way up to 100%.

TELECOMMUTING OK?

Is it OK for your candidate to telecommute? Here you can choose Yes or No depending on what’s acceptable to you.

INTERNAL JOB INFORMATION:

As it says on the page, These fields are for internal use only and will not be displayed as part of the job posting. In addition, EMPLOYEE level members will not have access to this information by default. This can be changed in the Admin > Team > Permissions settings.

HIRING LEAD:

Choose your Hiring Lead here. This lets your team know who’s responsible for this job posting.

EEO CATEGORY:

If your company reports to The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, this is where you can assign your EEO-1 data to the job that’s being posted.

SALARY RANGE:

This will tell your team what the acceptable salary range for this specific position is or what is going for approval internally. If you have a fixed number in mind, you can just fill in the first field.

COMMON QUESTIONS:

Most jobs will have a common set of questions attached to them, regardless of industry. These kinds of questions will include things like “Where did you go to school”, “What are your salary expectations” or “What is your LinkedIn profile”. Here, you can choose to add these common questions to your job ad and whether or not to make them mandatory for the applicant to fill out.

Clicking on the left checkbox will add the question to your job ad while clicking on the right one will force the user to answer the question before they are allowed to submit their application.

Answers to these questions will appear in the candidate’s profile page under the “Profile” tab.

SKILLS SELF-ASSESSMENT QUESTIONS:

As part of your job ad, you can ask custom questions around a particular skill level. For example, you can ask about “Experience with Microsoft Office including Word, Excel and Powerpoint” and have the candidate answer one of three skill levels: “No Experience”, “Some Experience” or “Expert”.

Each answer the applicant gives in this section is awarded points. The points are spread as follows:

The points for each answer are then aggregated and averaged for a score that appears on the candidate profile page giving you a numerical value from 0-100 based on how skilled they are in relation to your position. A 0 point score means they have no skills and a 100 point score means they are an expert and probably worth an interview!

APPLICANT QUESTIONS:

For each of your job posts, you can also add custom questions outside the Common and Skills Self-Assessment Questions. These can be as detailed or open ended as you like and they come in four types:

Form Field - This gives the applicant one line to answer your question.

Yes / No - This gives the applicant the choice of answering either “Yes” or “No” to your question

Check Boxes - This gives a range of options for your candidate to answer. They can answer either none, just one or all of them.

Paragraph - This gives the applicant a full paragraph of text to answer your question.

Applicant Questions created and attached to your job are also stored in your “Applicant Questionnaire” section under the Admin> Template & Forms section. There, you can re-use these questions if you post your job again or you can copy them onto another job.

Note - Applicant question can be used during the initial applicant screening process OR be sent individually once an applicant has applied.

When you’re finished, just click the Save Job button and your job post will be saved.

Please note that job posts to your internal and external sites will get posted immediately. We push out a feed every night at 2am PST and any updates to your jobs will be pushed to the various job boards then. You should see your job post appear on the free job boards such as Indeed and Simply Hired shortly.